Visit London Blog » literaturehttp://blog.visitlondon.com
Enjoy the very best of LondonMon, 23 Feb 2015 16:10:40 +0000en-UShourly1http://wordpress.org/?v=4.1.1Celebrating Edward Thomas at the Southbank Centrehttp://blog.visitlondon.com/2011/09/celebrating-edward-thomas-at-the-southbank-centre/
http://blog.visitlondon.com/2011/09/celebrating-edward-thomas-at-the-southbank-centre/#commentsFri, 23 Sep 2011 16:00:10 +0000http://blog.visitlondon.com/?p=22981Already two weeks into their autumn series of literature and spoken word events, last night the Southbank Centre presented “Celebrating Edward Thomas”, an evening exploring the work of the revered First World War poet, hosted by Matthew Hollis.

Thomas could easily be described as “the best war poet you’ve never heard of”. Not traditionally part of the “War Poets” canon, he has remained something of a poet’s poet since his death at the Battle of Arras in 1917. But a new book by Hollis tracing the last five years of Thomas’s life, including his friendship with Robert Frost, is bringing his work to a wider audience.

Readers at the event, Andrew Motion, Michael Longley, Gillian Clarke and Sarah Hall, credited Thomas as not only a great poet, but a revolutionary one. His work brought in colloquial, idiomatic and conversational speech to poetry for the first time. In the words of National Poet for Wales Gillian Clarke, Thomas â€œset the century freeâ€. The poems read last night were beautiful, evocative and to me, entirely fresh.

Tall Nettles

Tall nettles cover up, as they have done
These many springs, the rusty harrow, the plough
Long worn out, and the roller made of stone:
Only the elm butt tops the nettles now.

This corner of the farmyard I like most:
As well as any bloom upon a flower
I like the dust on the nettles, never lost
Except to prove the sweetness of a shower.

Upcoming events as part of the Southbank Centre’s autumn Literature and Spoken Word season include an evening with President Jimmy Carter, a screening of Louis Malle’s â€œMy Dinner with Andreâ€, and Carol Ann Duffy reading from â€œThe Beesâ€, her first full collection since becoming Poet Laureate in 2009.

“Now All Roads Lead To France” by Matthew Hollis is available to buy from Amazon.

]]>http://blog.visitlondon.com/2011/09/celebrating-edward-thomas-at-the-southbank-centre/feed/1Out of this World at the British Libraryhttp://blog.visitlondon.com/2011/05/out-of-this-world-at-the-british-library/
http://blog.visitlondon.com/2011/05/out-of-this-world-at-the-british-library/#commentsMon, 23 May 2011 11:00:30 +0000http://blog.visitlondon.com/?p=21298

The new exhibition at the British Library is subtitled “Science Fiction but not as you know it” and aims to demonstrate the genre’s often overlooked breadth and depth.

Breadth is represented by the range of authors, including writers from 2nd century Roman Empire to 21st century China by way of the Brontë sisters, and topics, everything from first contact with aliens to the end of the world, from cyberpunk to steampunk. Depth comes from the examination of such themes as what it means to be human and how we relate to the universe around us and the technology we use.

The emphasis is on the written word – mostly prose fiction but also graphic novels, comic books, manga and poetry – with original authors’ manuscripts sitting alongside mass-market editions. There are film clips and science fiction inspired music, and should you be inspired, or just think you can do better, you can design your own alien.

In the middle of the exhibition you’ll find a TARDIS , which when added to the one at the Doctor Who Experience, the one at the The London Film Museum and the real police box at Earl’s Court means London must currently be a nexus in the space-time continuum. Or something like that.

Science fiction fans and newcomers alike will come away with a lengthy list of books they want to read.

Out of this World is on at the British Library until 25 September 2011. Free admission to the exhibition itself. Tickets to the surrounding programme of talks and screenings are £7.50, £5.00 concessions.

]]>http://blog.visitlondon.com/2011/05/out-of-this-world-at-the-british-library/feed/1London’s Top 10 Independent Bookshopshttp://blog.visitlondon.com/2009/11/londons-top-10-independent-bookshops/
http://blog.visitlondon.com/2009/11/londons-top-10-independent-bookshops/#commentsTue, 17 Nov 2009 10:00:19 +0000http://blog.visitlondon.com/?p=3939Shopping for books in London is a perfect way to pass the time. Here are some of our favourite independent bookshops in London – they’re ideal for Christmas presents!

1. Foyles
Famous Foyles is a sprawling department store with books on every subject. There are four floors of books to choose from and a café to contemplate your books. You’ll even spot a few well chosen second-hand books nestling between the new ones to give you a comprehensive choice.

2. Grant & Cutler
Specialising in foreign language books (in more than 150 languages), Grant & Cutler is the place to go if you’re learning a new language or missing books in your first language. Grant & Cutler stock international classics for students, the latest blockbusters from around the world and any educational language material you might ever decide you need.

3. Daunt BooksDaunt Books in Marylebone High Street is a very satisfying place to buy books. The old-fashioned wood panelling and balconies seem to saturate the books with wisdom and gravitas. Daunt have a large selection of travel books and they sensibly place guidebooks, novels and travel diaries together by country.

4. My Back PagesMy Back Pages in Balham is stuffed with second-hand books. You can lose hours in this shop, get cramp from prolonged rummaging through boxes or unexpectedly clamber over some books and discover another customer sitting on the floor dreamily building a book castle of their potential purchases. If you leave My Back Pages without armfuls of books, you’re doing it wrong.

5. RD FranksRD Franks stocks the most attractive books in town. Specialising in books and magazines about fashion and textiles, you’ll find imported and specialist glossy mags predicting cutting edge trends. RD Franks is worth a visit if you’re a stylish reader. Frustratingly, the shop is only open during office hours and not on Saturdays, so the majority of customers are students hanging about reading the magazines.

6. The London Review Bookshop
Visiting The London Review Bookshop will make you smarter. It’s the very antithesis of the bargain book selection in your local supermarket. Bookworms will be pleased to hear that the books at the London Review Bookshop appear to be chosen for their literary, imaginative and intellectual merit. And they serve cake.

7. The Riverside BookshopThe Riverside Bookshops is tiny, but beautiful. There’s a good selection of the latest fiction, and a little bit of everything else. Florence Welch (of Florence and the Machine) recently said it was one of her favourite places in London to hang out. It’s also temptingly close to VL Towers and causes us much accidental lunchtime book buying.

8. The Persephone BookshopThe Persephone Bookshop is a publishing house bookshop selling Persephone books. The books are exciting – re-prints of forgotten novels by female authors with vintage designs on the endpapers. So much love has gone into creating these books, it’s hard not to eulogise at great length about how comforting they are to curl up with. You’ll be back for more.

9. Quinto BookshopQuinto Bookshop is a traditional, second-hand bookshop on Charing Cross Road. The shop is packed with books on all subjects. Oddly, most of the fun seems to take place just outside Quinto’s front door. Bibliophiles have been known to queue up outside the shop after the monthly stock-take to get their hands on the incoming treasures, and we’ve spotted some fans of Zachary â€˜Spock’ Quinto posing outside for Vulcan salute photos (and probably heading up the road for another photo session outside Koenig’s bookshop afterwards!)

10. Ripping Yarns
Remember your favourite childhood books that inspired your love of reading? Ripping Yarns specialises in collectable children’s books so you can have more adventures with the Famous Five. If you can’t remember the title or the author, you can describe the creatures and the story to the bookshop staff and they’ll probably be able to find it for you. Ripping Yarns also sell vintage annuals, children’s compendiums and comics.